MCPS to end areawide Blair Magnet and countywide Richard Montgomery's IB program

Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:The worst thing about this is the loss of the incredible magnet teachers that we will have at both the RM IB and Blair SMCS. My son is a student at the Blair Magnet program, and their math teacher has a PHD in math from Yale! Other teachers are equally qualified and hold PHDs from many renowned universities in the country. There is no way that these teachers will opt for teaching county magnet programs, as they are more than qualified to teach college level classes with much more pay as well. They stay because they enjoy teaching a group of highly motivated students who love to learn. The loss of teachers will be something we won't be able to replace, even after Taylor is gone.


Seems like you are making a lot of assumptions here, about the teachers and the future students.


Not that pp, but my child also goes to the same program, and more than one teachers told their personal stories to students about why they chose to stay in Blair SMACS, and the reasons are highly similar to what described above. They will choose to leave the magnet as it's not rewarding anymore to themselves, and practically many of the current courses will not exist anymore due to lack of enrollment.

If true, those teachers are not great in reasoning then, and perhaps not as incredible as some PPs describe. They’re assuming students in the future regional magnet will not be a group of highly motivated students who love to learn. We don’t know the criteria of the regional program, so we don’t know what those students will be like. If they maintain a hard cutoff of 90% MAP (“A” students by objective measure), the type of students should be the same. Incredible teachers are good at reasoning and not emotionally reactive.


It has been repeatedly cited in this forum that the median MAP-M score for the admitted students is somewhere around 285, which is >99% for Grade 12 according to NWEA breakdown. More than 50% of the current SMACS students came from Churchill and Wootton, and the 3rd is WJ. Many admitted students had won state or national STEM prizes before joining SMACS. What makes believe that the new regional program wouldn't be significantly watered down?


The fact that most of the current students came from just 3 schools suggests that it should be no problem to fill the regional programs with kids from 4-5 schools each, right? The admission standards might have to be a tad bit lower if the distribution of smart kids isn't exactly equal between those 3 schools and the others in the county, but presumably that's a pretty small difference.


Is this a joke?
It's astronomically different. What is your explanation for why almost no one in Silver Spring qualifies for SMACS, while students from Rockville/Potomac/Bethesda bus in from far away?

SMACS already struggles to fill upper level courses, offering many electives only once every 2 years.

Splitting Blair SMACS into 3 would eliminate those classes.

The Functions (advanced/accelerated Alg2/Precalculus) class has 20 kids. If you split those kids across 2-3 regions, what happens to them?

Yes, there are students that would thrive in regional STEM programs that enhance their current home school offerings with more AP options and some electives. No, no one is helped by shattering the current SMACS into 4 parts and pretending that those kids are well-matched to programs that run courses at half the academic pace.


What on earth makes you think that "almost no one in Silver Spring qualifies"? There's like 30+ Silver Spring kids who actually attend Blair SMCS every year right now, plus presumably many others who get "beat out' by richer kids from elsewhere in the county who can juice their MAP scores in ways most Silver Spring families can't. Why would the difference in the number of smart, motivated kids from rich schools and poor schools be "astronomically different"?


37 in total from Blair catchment: https://go.boarddocs.com/mabe/mcpsmd/Board.nsf/files/DJVQ56678E2B/$file/Attachment%20D%20SY2025%20Student%20Enrollment%20Countywide%20Programs%20250724.pdf

I agree with you that switching to regional model might encourage more admitted students from, e.g., Whiteman, to attend Blair. But the overall number of "qualified" students is undoubtedly going to reduce significantly. Of course you can always lower down the qualification threshold.


Blair is not the only school in Silver Spring. And if the qualification threshold isn't based on the intelligence and potential of the students, but is just based on getting super-high MAP scores which can be and frequently are gamed/skewed, then probably it should be lowered so that the smartest kids don't get blocked out by "merely bright" hard workers with rich parents who are good at test prep. But that doesn't mean the standards would be decreased-- arguably you would get even higher numbers of the smartest kids in that way.


The top feeders to Blair, by catchment, are:

1. Wootton (25%)
2. Churchill (20%)
3. The entire DCC combined. (Blair, Wheaton, Einstein, Kennedy, Northwood) (20%)

And that's not counting kids who don't go to Blair from W because of the long commute or because they go to elite private schools (Whitman catchment).

The "prep" whine is a myth. The W kids at SMACS who are getting that 285+ (SMACS median) are mostly getting it by 7th, a whole year ahead of the application deadline.

Anyone getting an A in geometry in 8th grade is getting 285+ or very close to it.

Anyway the whole "prep" complaint is nonsensical. If your kid doesn't like doing more than the minimum amount of work the school assigns in middle school, not even a tiny bit of Khan academy, then why the heck would your kid want to go to SMACS, with an extra course every year, with accelerated courses with more homework?


Do you seriously think that the only reason some kids don't do lots of supplementation and test prep is because they're not hard-working and don't like schoolwork? You must live in a bubble. Just because it's common knowledge in your circles that if you want to get into Blair you've got to play the game and do Khan Academy or whatever to get ahead of what's taught in school, doesn't mean that everyone else knows that. And they shouldn't have to, and families that do know shouldn't get extra advantages because of it.


Teachers are perfectly capable of mentoring smart, but disadvantaged kids. That happened to lots of us. And frankly, those kids have lots of time in class with Chromebooks if they want to do well.


Many of these smarter kids aren't disadvantaged but their parents choose lower cost housing as either they are in lower paying professions or one income or another reasons.


Read the PP…
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Some of ya'll really need to settle down. Great teachers exist outside of the magnet programs. One of my kids not at a magnet Algebra teacher had a masters in math from John Hopkins. My other kid's MS math teacher (different school) was certified to teach math at the MS and HS level and was finishing up an Education Leadership doctorate.

Some teach a schools that are closer to where they live, others want to influence a certain demographic, and others are just happy at their school.

Will there likely need to be some hiring and training, sure, but if they finalize things in short order, like by February, they will have at least a whole year to get that done. Heck they could make it part of the recruiting strategy now.

No one said we don't have some great teachers, but some people want advanced math in *every* HS. Finding good teachers to teach really advanced math for every HS is going to be very difficult to find, not to mention the fact that in some schools there won't be enough demand for such classes to fill the classroom. Not good use of taxpayer $.


They only need one teacher for anything past bc. We have several teachers who could teach it. You just need Mv and linear algebra at every school. So, that’s two extra classes beyond what is provided now.


Not true... At Blair, math classes include Logic, Discrete Mathematics, Advanced Geometry, Origins of Math, Complex Analysis (This is the course after MV calc and Lin Alg), and an Advanced Statistics Class (not to be confused with AP Stats). Similar things hold for science classes. As you can clearly see, it will be impossible to implement all these classes to the level they are taught at at Blair across the regional programs.



You are missing the point that we don't need a school offering all these COLLEGE LEVEL classes when we haven't even solved for offering the basic advance class offerings to all academically advanced students. Some schools aren't even offering AP Stats, BC Calc, or MVC.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Some of ya'll really need to settle down. Great teachers exist outside of the magnet programs. One of my kids not at a magnet Algebra teacher had a masters in math from John Hopkins. My other kid's MS math teacher (different school) was certified to teach math at the MS and HS level and was finishing up an Education Leadership doctorate.

Some teach a schools that are closer to where they live, others want to influence a certain demographic, and others are just happy at their school.

Will there likely need to be some hiring and training, sure, but if they finalize things in short order, like by February, they will have at least a whole year to get that done. Heck they could make it part of the recruiting strategy now.

No one said we don't have some great teachers, but some people want advanced math in *every* HS. Finding good teachers to teach really advanced math for every HS is going to be very difficult to find, not to mention the fact that in some schools there won't be enough demand for such classes to fill the classroom. Not good use of taxpayer $.


They only need one teacher for anything past bc. We have several teachers who could teach it. You just need Mv and linear algebra at every school. So, that’s two extra classes beyond what is provided now.


Not true... At Blair, math classes include Logic, Discrete Mathematics, Advanced Geometry, Origins of Math, Complex Analysis (This is the course after MV calc and Lin Alg), and an Advanced Statistics Class (not to be confused with AP Stats). Similar things hold for science classes. As you can clearly see, it will be impossible to implement all these classes to the level they are taught at at Blair across the regional programs.



You are missing the point that we don't need a school offering all these COLLEGE LEVEL classes when we haven't even solved for offering the basic advance class offerings to all academically advanced students. Some schools aren't even offering AP Stats, BC Calc, or MVC.


So are you hoping the deterioration of the current Blair magnet can lead to creation of those advanced math classes (just AP Stats, BC Calc and MVC) in every other HS? You do realize that teachers who are capable of teaching these class require either math-major background or excessive training. And schools who can open these courses require enough student enrollment. Taylor has been very explicit that he plans to spend zero dollar on extra training or recruiting new teachers. The savings that you can get from letting Blair magnet teachers go wouldn't afford the 6 regional programs nor advanced math classes in every HS.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Some of ya'll really need to settle down. Great teachers exist outside of the magnet programs. One of my kids not at a magnet Algebra teacher had a masters in math from John Hopkins. My other kid's MS math teacher (different school) was certified to teach math at the MS and HS level and was finishing up an Education Leadership doctorate.

Some teach a schools that are closer to where they live, others want to influence a certain demographic, and others are just happy at their school.

Will there likely need to be some hiring and training, sure, but if they finalize things in short order, like by February, they will have at least a whole year to get that done. Heck they could make it part of the recruiting strategy now.

No one said we don't have some great teachers, but some people want advanced math in *every* HS. Finding good teachers to teach really advanced math for every HS is going to be very difficult to find, not to mention the fact that in some schools there won't be enough demand for such classes to fill the classroom. Not good use of taxpayer $.


They only need one teacher for anything past bc. We have several teachers who could teach it. You just need Mv and linear algebra at every school. So, that’s two extra classes beyond what is provided now.


Not true... At Blair, math classes include Logic, Discrete Mathematics, Advanced Geometry, Origins of Math, Complex Analysis (This is the course after MV calc and Lin Alg), and an Advanced Statistics Class (not to be confused with AP Stats). Similar things hold for science classes. As you can clearly see, it will be impossible to implement all these classes to the level they are taught at at Blair across the regional programs.



You are missing the point that we don't need a school offering all these COLLEGE LEVEL classes when we haven't even solved for offering the basic advance class offerings to all academically advanced students. Some schools aren't even offering AP Stats, BC Calc, or MVC.


High schools teach a lot of middle school level classes, so what's wrong with college level classes?
Anonymous
Oh, I have an idea! For the highly advanced students under age 18, send them to a countywide college program. We can call it something like Blair Polytechnic Community College.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Some of ya'll really need to settle down. Great teachers exist outside of the magnet programs. One of my kids not at a magnet Algebra teacher had a masters in math from John Hopkins. My other kid's MS math teacher (different school) was certified to teach math at the MS and HS level and was finishing up an Education Leadership doctorate.

Some teach a schools that are closer to where they live, others want to influence a certain demographic, and others are just happy at their school.

Will there likely need to be some hiring and training, sure, but if they finalize things in short order, like by February, they will have at least a whole year to get that done. Heck they could make it part of the recruiting strategy now.

No one said we don't have some great teachers, but some people want advanced math in *every* HS. Finding good teachers to teach really advanced math for every HS is going to be very difficult to find, not to mention the fact that in some schools there won't be enough demand for such classes to fill the classroom. Not good use of taxpayer $.


They only need one teacher for anything past bc. We have several teachers who could teach it. You just need Mv and linear algebra at every school. So, that’s two extra classes beyond what is provided now.


Not true... At Blair, math classes include Logic, Discrete Mathematics, Advanced Geometry, Origins of Math, Complex Analysis (This is the course after MV calc and Lin Alg), and an Advanced Statistics Class (not to be confused with AP Stats). Similar things hold for science classes. As you can clearly see, it will be impossible to implement all these classes to the level they are taught at at Blair across the regional programs.



You are missing the point that we don't need a school offering all these COLLEGE LEVEL classes when we haven't even solved for offering the basic advance class offerings to all academically advanced students. Some schools aren't even offering AP Stats, BC Calc, or MVC.


So are you hoping the deterioration of the current Blair magnet can lead to creation of those advanced math classes (just AP Stats, BC Calc and MVC) in every other HS? You do realize that teachers who are capable of teaching these class require either math-major background or excessive training. And schools who can open these courses require enough student enrollment. Taylor has been very explicit that he plans to spend zero dollar on extra training or recruiting new teachers. The savings that you can get from letting Blair magnet teachers go wouldn't afford the 6 regional programs nor advanced math classes in every HS.


Both are needed but the magnets serve a very small number of kids so is it worth MCPS funding when they can go to their home schools and get advance classes and then more kids can benefit from it?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Some of ya'll really need to settle down. Great teachers exist outside of the magnet programs. One of my kids not at a magnet Algebra teacher had a masters in math from John Hopkins. My other kid's MS math teacher (different school) was certified to teach math at the MS and HS level and was finishing up an Education Leadership doctorate.

Some teach a schools that are closer to where they live, others want to influence a certain demographic, and others are just happy at their school.

Will there likely need to be some hiring and training, sure, but if they finalize things in short order, like by February, they will have at least a whole year to get that done. Heck they could make it part of the recruiting strategy now.

No one said we don't have some great teachers, but some people want advanced math in *every* HS. Finding good teachers to teach really advanced math for every HS is going to be very difficult to find, not to mention the fact that in some schools there won't be enough demand for such classes to fill the classroom. Not good use of taxpayer $.


They only need one teacher for anything past bc. We have several teachers who could teach it. You just need Mv and linear algebra at every school. So, that’s two extra classes beyond what is provided now.


Not true... At Blair, math classes include Logic, Discrete Mathematics, Advanced Geometry, Origins of Math, Complex Analysis (This is the course after MV calc and Lin Alg), and an Advanced Statistics Class (not to be confused with AP Stats). Similar things hold for science classes. As you can clearly see, it will be impossible to implement all these classes to the level they are taught at at Blair across the regional programs.



You are missing the point that we don't need a school offering all these COLLEGE LEVEL classes when we haven't even solved for offering the basic advance class offerings to all academically advanced students. Some schools aren't even offering AP Stats, BC Calc, or MVC.


High schools teach a lot of middle school level classes, so what's wrong with college level classes?


They are high school level classes, not college.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Some of ya'll really need to settle down. Great teachers exist outside of the magnet programs. One of my kids not at a magnet Algebra teacher had a masters in math from John Hopkins. My other kid's MS math teacher (different school) was certified to teach math at the MS and HS level and was finishing up an Education Leadership doctorate.

Some teach a schools that are closer to where they live, others want to influence a certain demographic, and others are just happy at their school.

Will there likely need to be some hiring and training, sure, but if they finalize things in short order, like by February, they will have at least a whole year to get that done. Heck they could make it part of the recruiting strategy now.

No one said we don't have some great teachers, but some people want advanced math in *every* HS. Finding good teachers to teach really advanced math for every HS is going to be very difficult to find, not to mention the fact that in some schools there won't be enough demand for such classes to fill the classroom. Not good use of taxpayer $.


They only need one teacher for anything past bc. We have several teachers who could teach it. You just need Mv and linear algebra at every school. So, that’s two extra classes beyond what is provided now.


Not true... At Blair, math classes include Logic, Discrete Mathematics, Advanced Geometry, Origins of Math, Complex Analysis (This is the course after MV calc and Lin Alg), and an Advanced Statistics Class (not to be confused with AP Stats). Similar things hold for science classes. As you can clearly see, it will be impossible to implement all these classes to the level they are taught at at Blair across the regional programs.



You are missing the point that we don't need a school offering all these COLLEGE LEVEL classes when we haven't even solved for offering the basic advance class offerings to all academically advanced students. Some schools aren't even offering AP Stats, BC Calc, or MVC.


So are you hoping the deterioration of the current Blair magnet can lead to creation of those advanced math classes (just AP Stats, BC Calc and MVC) in every other HS? You do realize that teachers who are capable of teaching these class require either math-major background or excessive training. And schools who can open these courses require enough student enrollment. Taylor has been very explicit that he plans to spend zero dollar on extra training or recruiting new teachers. The savings that you can get from letting Blair magnet teachers go wouldn't afford the 6 regional programs nor advanced math classes in every HS.


Both are needed but the magnets serve a very small number of kids so is it worth MCPS funding when they can go to their home schools and get advance classes and then more kids can benefit from it?


The regional model wouldn't shut down Blair/Poolsville SMACS nor RMIB. So assuming teachers there still want to stay, you don't save any $$ from not letting the very small number of high-achiever kids attending Blair SMACS anymore. Instead, the ones with homeschool from Ws can probably still at least take up to MVC back in their home schools or in a regional STEM program, but the other ones will find no advanced math courses back in their regions, because either lacking qualified teachers, or enough high-achieving students to enroll with him/her. In the same time, the regional model will face more and more in-equality over the time. In practice, you probably will see the magnet teachers either leave (because there's no more really advanced class to teach anymore) or move to regions with more resources (money-wise, student resource-wise, etc.).
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Some of ya'll really need to settle down. Great teachers exist outside of the magnet programs. One of my kids not at a magnet Algebra teacher had a masters in math from John Hopkins. My other kid's MS math teacher (different school) was certified to teach math at the MS and HS level and was finishing up an Education Leadership doctorate.

Some teach a schools that are closer to where they live, others want to influence a certain demographic, and others are just happy at their school.

Will there likely need to be some hiring and training, sure, but if they finalize things in short order, like by February, they will have at least a whole year to get that done. Heck they could make it part of the recruiting strategy now.

No one said we don't have some great teachers, but some people want advanced math in *every* HS. Finding good teachers to teach really advanced math for every HS is going to be very difficult to find, not to mention the fact that in some schools there won't be enough demand for such classes to fill the classroom. Not good use of taxpayer $.


They only need one teacher for anything past bc. We have several teachers who could teach it. You just need Mv and linear algebra at every school. So, that’s two extra classes beyond what is provided now.


Not true... At Blair, math classes include Logic, Discrete Mathematics, Advanced Geometry, Origins of Math, Complex Analysis (This is the course after MV calc and Lin Alg), and an Advanced Statistics Class (not to be confused with AP Stats). Similar things hold for science classes. As you can clearly see, it will be impossible to implement all these classes to the level they are taught at at Blair across the regional programs.



You are missing the point that we don't need a school offering all these COLLEGE LEVEL classes when we haven't even solved for offering the basic advance class offerings to all academically advanced students. Some schools aren't even offering AP Stats, BC Calc, or MVC.


So are you hoping the deterioration of the current Blair magnet can lead to creation of those advanced math classes (just AP Stats, BC Calc and MVC) in every other HS? You do realize that teachers who are capable of teaching these class require either math-major background or excessive training. And schools who can open these courses require enough student enrollment. Taylor has been very explicit that he plans to spend zero dollar on extra training or recruiting new teachers. The savings that you can get from letting Blair magnet teachers go wouldn't afford the 6 regional programs nor advanced math classes in every HS.


Both are needed but the magnets serve a very small number of kids so is it worth MCPS funding when they can go to their home schools and get advance classes and then more kids can benefit from it?


The regional model wouldn't shut down Blair/Poolsville SMACS nor RMIB. So assuming teachers there still want to stay, you don't save any $$ from not letting the very small number of high-achiever kids attending Blair SMACS anymore. Instead, the ones with homeschool from Ws can probably still at least take up to MVC back in their home schools or in a regional STEM program, but the other ones will find no advanced math courses back in their regions, because either lacking qualified teachers, or enough high-achieving students to enroll with him/her. In the same time, the regional model will face more and more in-equality over the time. In practice, you probably will see the magnet teachers either leave (because there's no more really advanced class to teach anymore) or move to regions with more resources (money-wise, student resource-wise, etc.).


Exactly, the regional model creates further inequalities, so if the regional model is being proposed in the name of equity, then it makes no sense. The regions with established nationally-known programs will benefit from those programs while the regions with the new watered-down programs will be blocked off from those excellent programs. All this regional model does is ghettoize the inequalities further within some regions. For example, someone on here crunched the numbers on existing learning gaps and other socioeconomic indicators and some regions are really getting the short end of the stick here. That's the whole point of these county wide magnets, to make the same opportunities available to students from across the county, not ghettoize resources and the best opportunities within the W regions.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Some of ya'll really need to settle down. Great teachers exist outside of the magnet programs. One of my kids not at a magnet Algebra teacher had a masters in math from John Hopkins. My other kid's MS math teacher (different school) was certified to teach math at the MS and HS level and was finishing up an Education Leadership doctorate.

Some teach a schools that are closer to where they live, others want to influence a certain demographic, and others are just happy at their school.

Will there likely need to be some hiring and training, sure, but if they finalize things in short order, like by February, they will have at least a whole year to get that done. Heck they could make it part of the recruiting strategy now.

No one said we don't have some great teachers, but some people want advanced math in *every* HS. Finding good teachers to teach really advanced math for every HS is going to be very difficult to find, not to mention the fact that in some schools there won't be enough demand for such classes to fill the classroom. Not good use of taxpayer $.


They only need one teacher for anything past bc. We have several teachers who could teach it. You just need Mv and linear algebra at every school. So, that’s two extra classes beyond what is provided now.


Not true... At Blair, math classes include Logic, Discrete Mathematics, Advanced Geometry, Origins of Math, Complex Analysis (This is the course after MV calc and Lin Alg), and an Advanced Statistics Class (not to be confused with AP Stats). Similar things hold for science classes. As you can clearly see, it will be impossible to implement all these classes to the level they are taught at at Blair across the regional programs.



You are missing the point that we don't need a school offering all these COLLEGE LEVEL classes when we haven't even solved for offering the basic advance class offerings to all academically advanced students. Some schools aren't even offering AP Stats, BC Calc, or MVC.


So are you hoping the deterioration of the current Blair magnet can lead to creation of those advanced math classes (just AP Stats, BC Calc and MVC) in every other HS? You do realize that teachers who are capable of teaching these class require either math-major background or excessive training. And schools who can open these courses require enough student enrollment. Taylor has been very explicit that he plans to spend zero dollar on extra training or recruiting new teachers. The savings that you can get from letting Blair magnet teachers go wouldn't afford the 6 regional programs nor advanced math classes in every HS.


Both are needed but the magnets serve a very small number of kids so is it worth MCPS funding when they can go to their home schools and get advance classes and then more kids can benefit from it?


The regional model wouldn't shut down Blair/Poolsville SMACS nor RMIB. So assuming teachers there still want to stay, you don't save any $$ from not letting the very small number of high-achiever kids attending Blair SMACS anymore. Instead, the ones with homeschool from Ws can probably still at least take up to MVC back in their home schools or in a regional STEM program, but the other ones will find no advanced math courses back in their regions, because either lacking qualified teachers, or enough high-achieving students to enroll with him/her. In the same time, the regional model will face more and more in-equality over the time. In practice, you probably will see the magnet teachers either leave (because there's no more really advanced class to teach anymore) or move to regions with more resources (money-wise, student resource-wise, etc.).


Exactly, the regional model creates further inequalities, so if the regional model is being proposed in the name of equity, then it makes no sense. The regions with established nationally-known programs will benefit from those programs while the regions with the new watered-down programs will be blocked off from those excellent programs. All this regional model does is ghettoize the inequalities further within some regions. For example, someone on here crunched the numbers on existing learning gaps and other socioeconomic indicators and some regions are really getting the short end of the stick here. That's the whole point of these county wide magnets, to make the same opportunities available to students from across the county, not ghettoize resources and the best opportunities within the W regions.


The regional model is silly as few will want to travel cross county. Rich schools still will have all the classes and the other schools still will not. It really is all show and no substance.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This is good news for rising 8th graders, assuming it’s true.

“ Beginning with the class of 2031, students would attend programs available in their specific regions.”

It’s good for rising 7th graders not 8th graders.


My kid will be in the class of 2031 and I do not think it is good. I think my kid will benefit from Poolesville SMCS not a watered down magnet at our zoned high school.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Some of ya'll really need to settle down. Great teachers exist outside of the magnet programs. One of my kids not at a magnet Algebra teacher had a masters in math from John Hopkins. My other kid's MS math teacher (different school) was certified to teach math at the MS and HS level and was finishing up an Education Leadership doctorate.

Some teach a schools that are closer to where they live, others want to influence a certain demographic, and others are just happy at their school.

Will there likely need to be some hiring and training, sure, but if they finalize things in short order, like by February, they will have at least a whole year to get that done. Heck they could make it part of the recruiting strategy now.

No one said we don't have some great teachers, but some people want advanced math in *every* HS. Finding good teachers to teach really advanced math for every HS is going to be very difficult to find, not to mention the fact that in some schools there won't be enough demand for such classes to fill the classroom. Not good use of taxpayer $.


They only need one teacher for anything past bc. We have several teachers who could teach it. You just need Mv and linear algebra at every school. So, that’s two extra classes beyond what is provided now.


Not true... At Blair, math classes include Logic, Discrete Mathematics, Advanced Geometry, Origins of Math, Complex Analysis (This is the course after MV calc and Lin Alg), and an Advanced Statistics Class (not to be confused with AP Stats). Similar things hold for science classes. As you can clearly see, it will be impossible to implement all these classes to the level they are taught at at Blair across the regional programs.



You are missing the point that we don't need a school offering all these COLLEGE LEVEL classes when we haven't even solved for offering the basic advance class offerings to all academically advanced students. Some schools aren't even offering AP Stats, BC Calc, or MVC.


So are you hoping the deterioration of the current Blair magnet can lead to creation of those advanced math classes (just AP Stats, BC Calc and MVC) in every other HS? You do realize that teachers who are capable of teaching these class require either math-major background or excessive training. And schools who can open these courses require enough student enrollment. Taylor has been very explicit that he plans to spend zero dollar on extra training or recruiting new teachers. The savings that you can get from letting Blair magnet teachers go wouldn't afford the 6 regional programs nor advanced math classes in every HS.


Both are needed but the magnets serve a very small number of kids so is it worth MCPS funding when they can go to their home schools and get advance classes and then more kids can benefit from it?


The regional model wouldn't shut down Blair/Poolsville SMACS nor RMIB. So assuming teachers there still want to stay, you don't save any $$ from not letting the very small number of high-achiever kids attending Blair SMACS anymore. Instead, the ones with homeschool from Ws can probably still at least take up to MVC back in their home schools or in a regional STEM program, but the other ones will find no advanced math courses back in their regions, because either lacking qualified teachers, or enough high-achieving students to enroll with him/her. In the same time, the regional model will face more and more in-equality over the time. In practice, you probably will see the magnet teachers either leave (because there's no more really advanced class to teach anymore) or move to regions with more resources (money-wise, student resource-wise, etc.).


Exactly, the regional model creates further inequalities, so if the regional model is being proposed in the name of equity, then it makes no sense. The regions with established nationally-known programs will benefit from those programs while the regions with the new watered-down programs will be blocked off from those excellent programs. All this regional model does is ghettoize the inequalities further within some regions. For example, someone on here crunched the numbers on existing learning gaps and other socioeconomic indicators and some regions are really getting the short end of the stick here. That's the whole point of these county wide magnets, to make the same opportunities available to students from across the county, not ghettoize resources and the best opportunities within the W regions.


The existing magnet will be shattered as student and teachers are split up across 4 different schools, and some teachers quit.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Some of ya'll really need to settle down. Great teachers exist outside of the magnet programs. One of my kids not at a magnet Algebra teacher had a masters in math from John Hopkins. My other kid's MS math teacher (different school) was certified to teach math at the MS and HS level and was finishing up an Education Leadership doctorate.

Some teach a schools that are closer to where they live, others want to influence a certain demographic, and others are just happy at their school.

Will there likely need to be some hiring and training, sure, but if they finalize things in short order, like by February, they will have at least a whole year to get that done. Heck they could make it part of the recruiting strategy now.

No one said we don't have some great teachers, but some people want advanced math in *every* HS. Finding good teachers to teach really advanced math for every HS is going to be very difficult to find, not to mention the fact that in some schools there won't be enough demand for such classes to fill the classroom. Not good use of taxpayer $.


They only need one teacher for anything past bc. We have several teachers who could teach it. You just need Mv and linear algebra at every school. So, that’s two extra classes beyond what is provided now.


Not true... At Blair, math classes include Logic, Discrete Mathematics, Advanced Geometry, Origins of Math, Complex Analysis (This is the course after MV calc and Lin Alg), and an Advanced Statistics Class (not to be confused with AP Stats). Similar things hold for science classes. As you can clearly see, it will be impossible to implement all these classes to the level they are taught at at Blair across the regional programs.



You are missing the point that we don't need a school offering all these COLLEGE LEVEL classes when we haven't even solved for offering the basic advance class offerings to all academically advanced students. Some schools aren't even offering AP Stats, BC Calc, or MVC.


So are you hoping the deterioration of the current Blair magnet can lead to creation of those advanced math classes (just AP Stats, BC Calc and MVC) in every other HS? You do realize that teachers who are capable of teaching these class require either math-major background or excessive training. And schools who can open these courses require enough student enrollment. Taylor has been very explicit that he plans to spend zero dollar on extra training or recruiting new teachers. The savings that you can get from letting Blair magnet teachers go wouldn't afford the 6 regional programs nor advanced math classes in every HS.


Both are needed but the magnets serve a very small number of kids so is it worth MCPS funding when they can go to their home schools and get advance classes and then more kids can benefit from it?


The regional model wouldn't shut down Blair/Poolsville SMACS nor RMIB. So assuming teachers there still want to stay, you don't save any $$ from not letting the very small number of high-achiever kids attending Blair SMACS anymore. Instead, the ones with homeschool from Ws can probably still at least take up to MVC back in their home schools or in a regional STEM program, but the other ones will find no advanced math courses back in their regions, because either lacking qualified teachers, or enough high-achieving students to enroll with him/her. In the same time, the regional model will face more and more in-equality over the time. In practice, you probably will see the magnet teachers either leave (because there's no more really advanced class to teach anymore) or move to regions with more resources (money-wise, student resource-wise, etc.).


Exactly, the regional model creates further inequalities, so if the regional model is being proposed in the name of equity, then it makes no sense. The regions with established nationally-known programs will benefit from those programs while the regions with the new watered-down programs will be blocked off from those excellent programs. All this regional model does is ghettoize the inequalities further within some regions. For example, someone on here crunched the numbers on existing learning gaps and other socioeconomic indicators and some regions are really getting the short end of the stick here. That's the whole point of these county wide magnets, to make the same opportunities available to students from across the county, not ghettoize resources and the best opportunities within the W regions.


The existing magnet will be shattered as student and teachers are split up across 4 different schools, and some teachers quit.


So what? The existing Blair magnet doesn’t pull from all schools. It just has 4 clusters. There are plenty of talented teachers teaching advanced coursework at other high schools that are not special programs to the kids who don’t want to travel an hour a day each way to get to the magnets.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Some of ya'll really need to settle down. Great teachers exist outside of the magnet programs. One of my kids not at a magnet Algebra teacher had a masters in math from John Hopkins. My other kid's MS math teacher (different school) was certified to teach math at the MS and HS level and was finishing up an Education Leadership doctorate.

Some teach a schools that are closer to where they live, others want to influence a certain demographic, and others are just happy at their school.

Will there likely need to be some hiring and training, sure, but if they finalize things in short order, like by February, they will have at least a whole year to get that done. Heck they could make it part of the recruiting strategy now.

No one said we don't have some great teachers, but some people want advanced math in *every* HS. Finding good teachers to teach really advanced math for every HS is going to be very difficult to find, not to mention the fact that in some schools there won't be enough demand for such classes to fill the classroom. Not good use of taxpayer $.


They only need one teacher for anything past bc. We have several teachers who could teach it. You just need Mv and linear algebra at every school. So, that’s two extra classes beyond what is provided now.


Not true... At Blair, math classes include Logic, Discrete Mathematics, Advanced Geometry, Origins of Math, Complex Analysis (This is the course after MV calc and Lin Alg), and an Advanced Statistics Class (not to be confused with AP Stats). Similar things hold for science classes. As you can clearly see, it will be impossible to implement all these classes to the level they are taught at at Blair across the regional programs.



You are missing the point that we don't need a school offering all these COLLEGE LEVEL classes when we haven't even solved for offering the basic advance class offerings to all academically advanced students. Some schools aren't even offering AP Stats, BC Calc, or MVC.


So are you hoping the deterioration of the current Blair magnet can lead to creation of those advanced math classes (just AP Stats, BC Calc and MVC) in every other HS? You do realize that teachers who are capable of teaching these class require either math-major background or excessive training. And schools who can open these courses require enough student enrollment. Taylor has been very explicit that he plans to spend zero dollar on extra training or recruiting new teachers. The savings that you can get from letting Blair magnet teachers go wouldn't afford the 6 regional programs nor advanced math classes in every HS.


Both are needed but the magnets serve a very small number of kids so is it worth MCPS funding when they can go to their home schools and get advance classes and then more kids can benefit from it?


The regional model wouldn't shut down Blair/Poolsville SMACS nor RMIB. So assuming teachers there still want to stay, you don't save any $$ from not letting the very small number of high-achiever kids attending Blair SMACS anymore. Instead, the ones with homeschool from Ws can probably still at least take up to MVC back in their home schools or in a regional STEM program, but the other ones will find no advanced math courses back in their regions, because either lacking qualified teachers, or enough high-achieving students to enroll with him/her. In the same time, the regional model will face more and more in-equality over the time. In practice, you probably will see the magnet teachers either leave (because there's no more really advanced class to teach anymore) or move to regions with more resources (money-wise, student resource-wise, etc.).


Exactly, the regional model creates further inequalities, so if the regional model is being proposed in the name of equity, then it makes no sense. The regions with established nationally-known programs will benefit from those programs while the regions with the new watered-down programs will be blocked off from those excellent programs. All this regional model does is ghettoize the inequalities further within some regions. For example, someone on here crunched the numbers on existing learning gaps and other socioeconomic indicators and some regions are really getting the short end of the stick here. That's the whole point of these county wide magnets, to make the same opportunities available to students from across the county, not ghettoize resources and the best opportunities within the W regions.


The existing magnet will be shattered as student and teachers are split up across 4 different schools, and some teachers quit.


So what? The existing Blair magnet doesn’t pull from all schools. It just has 4 clusters. There are plenty of talented teachers teaching advanced coursework at other high schools that are not special programs to the kids who don’t want to travel an hour a day each way to get to the magnets.


Most of the current Blair magnet junior and senior courses have at most 20 students registered. Quite a few courses only open every other year in order to get a minimal enrollment. Spreading to 4 clusters meaning you’ll never have enough students to register these courses, and these are highly specialized courses that’s far beyond what Montgomery College can teach, and finding and training 3X more hyper-specialized teachers in 3 clusters are going to be difficult and costly. But central office believes teachers just need a two-week training to manage teaching math physics, organic chemistry or artificial intelligence. This is a humiliation to many parents who are professionals in these fields who understand the estimation that MCPS currently provides is nothing more than a joke.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Some of ya'll really need to settle down. Great teachers exist outside of the magnet programs. One of my kids not at a magnet Algebra teacher had a masters in math from John Hopkins. My other kid's MS math teacher (different school) was certified to teach math at the MS and HS level and was finishing up an Education Leadership doctorate.

Some teach a schools that are closer to where they live, others want to influence a certain demographic, and others are just happy at their school.

Will there likely need to be some hiring and training, sure, but if they finalize things in short order, like by February, they will have at least a whole year to get that done. Heck they could make it part of the recruiting strategy now.

No one said we don't have some great teachers, but some people want advanced math in *every* HS. Finding good teachers to teach really advanced math for every HS is going to be very difficult to find, not to mention the fact that in some schools there won't be enough demand for such classes to fill the classroom. Not good use of taxpayer $.


They only need one teacher for anything past bc. We have several teachers who could teach it. You just need Mv and linear algebra at every school. So, that’s two extra classes beyond what is provided now.


Not true... At Blair, math classes include Logic, Discrete Mathematics, Advanced Geometry, Origins of Math, Complex Analysis (This is the course after MV calc and Lin Alg), and an Advanced Statistics Class (not to be confused with AP Stats). Similar things hold for science classes. As you can clearly see, it will be impossible to implement all these classes to the level they are taught at at Blair across the regional programs.



You are missing the point that we don't need a school offering all these COLLEGE LEVEL classes when we haven't even solved for offering the basic advance class offerings to all academically advanced students. Some schools aren't even offering AP Stats, BC Calc, or MVC.


So are you hoping the deterioration of the current Blair magnet can lead to creation of those advanced math classes (just AP Stats, BC Calc and MVC) in every other HS? You do realize that teachers who are capable of teaching these class require either math-major background or excessive training. And schools who can open these courses require enough student enrollment. Taylor has been very explicit that he plans to spend zero dollar on extra training or recruiting new teachers. The savings that you can get from letting Blair magnet teachers go wouldn't afford the 6 regional programs nor advanced math classes in every HS.


Both are needed but the magnets serve a very small number of kids so is it worth MCPS funding when they can go to their home schools and get advance classes and then more kids can benefit from it?


The regional model wouldn't shut down Blair/Poolsville SMACS nor RMIB. So assuming teachers there still want to stay, you don't save any $$ from not letting the very small number of high-achiever kids attending Blair SMACS anymore. Instead, the ones with homeschool from Ws can probably still at least take up to MVC back in their home schools or in a regional STEM program, but the other ones will find no advanced math courses back in their regions, because either lacking qualified teachers, or enough high-achieving students to enroll with him/her. In the same time, the regional model will face more and more in-equality over the time. In practice, you probably will see the magnet teachers either leave (because there's no more really advanced class to teach anymore) or move to regions with more resources (money-wise, student resource-wise, etc.).


Exactly, the regional model creates further inequalities, so if the regional model is being proposed in the name of equity, then it makes no sense. The regions with established nationally-known programs will benefit from those programs while the regions with the new watered-down programs will be blocked off from those excellent programs. All this regional model does is ghettoize the inequalities further within some regions. For example, someone on here crunched the numbers on existing learning gaps and other socioeconomic indicators and some regions are really getting the short end of the stick here. That's the whole point of these county wide magnets, to make the same opportunities available to students from across the county, not ghettoize resources and the best opportunities within the W regions.


The regional model is silly as few will want to travel cross county. Rich schools still will have all the classes and the other schools still will not. It really is all show and no substance.


It may well come down to what you have written. Higher SES students in west county will stay home, and the home catchment students are prioritized for a seat in those west county schools. East county students in the same regions won't have an opportunity to attend a west county school in their home regions.
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